Saturday, November 8, 2025

Tragedy to triumph – Boyenko’s unique summer with Red Sox

Going Yard instructor helps coach Regina to WCBL title

By Darren Steinke
Gordie Howe Sports Complex

Brody Boyenko holds the WCBL championship trophy on Aug. 16.
It began with heartbreak no sports team should have to experience and ended with raising a league championship trophy.

When Going Yard Baseball Academy instructor Brody Boyenko joined the Regina Red Sox as an assistant coach this past May, he was looking forward to a second opportunity to coach in the WCBL. To coach with a program that has existed since 1913 playing in various leagues in its history was another bonus. He ended up getting more than he imagined during the spring and summer league baseball season.

Right at the start of the season in late May, the Red Sox were sent reeling by the tragic death of returning right-handed pitcher and Regina product Jesse Lubiniecki. The 22-year-old passed away in a single vehicle rollover in Rosebud County, Montana, on May 29.

Lubiniecki was driving home to rejoin the Red Sox after completing his season with the Taft College Cougars in Taft, California. He became a member of the Red Sox part way through the 2024 campaign.

From that unthinkable beginning, the Red Sox completed the 2025 campaign on August 16 taking a series deciding Game 3 of the WCBL Championship Series 5-4 against the host Sylvan Lake Gulls in Gulls Stadium before 1,895 spectators.

While Boyenko was obviously proud of what the Red Sox accomplished, it is still burned into his mind all the emotions the team went through when news of Lubiniecki’s unthinkable passing broke.

“That was my first experience of any athlete that I have coached or was going to coach pass away,” said Boyenko. “That whole week, it really kind of shook our team a little bit.

“The day we found out, we were actually playing a game, so even that game was tough to get through. That whole week, I just remember it was a very long and somber week. I feel like once we got through that week Jesse (Lubiniecki) was a big motivating factor behind our season after that point.”

Brody Boyenko works the first base line for the Red Sox at Cairns Field.
The Red Sox elected to keep Lubiniecki’s name tag attached to his stall and continue to have his #33 jersey hanging in his stall in the team’s dressing room at Currie Field through the entire season as a tribute. A rose was also laid inside of Lubiniecki’s stall in remembrance of the late pitcher.

On the road in the WCBL, the Red Sox encounter a number of dressing rooms that don’t have stalls in the visitor’s room. Instead of bringing Lubiniecki’s dressing room setup on the road, the Red Sox would say an “Our Father” prayer at every road park they played in to honour Lubiniecki. The Red Sox also wore a #33 patch on their jerseys to remember the late pitcher.

“Each coach, we didn’t approach players, but when we knew guys were going through it a little bit, we weren’t coaches anymore,” said Boyenko. “It was more or less person-to-person interaction, a human interaction, rather than a coach-to-player.

“It was more so trying to comfort the person in front of you rather than trying to coach them through it. It was very similar to when your friend loses a family member. You don’t coach them through how to grieve.

“You allow them to grieve, and when they finally show signs that their grieving process is slowly coming to an end or they’re slowly getting over the situation, that is when you start introducing some of the coaching back into it.”

On the field, the Red Sox found themselves floating around the .500 mark for much of the season. Things started to round together as they posted a 7-3 over their final 10 games of the regular season to place third in the East Division with a 29-27 mark. Boyenko said the confidence of the team was high going into the post-season.

“I felt throughout the season it was not like that roles weren’t established, but guys were trying to find where they could make an impact in the game,” said Boyenko, who turned 30 right before the playoffs started. “I feel like come playoff time guys weren’t trying to find that anymore.

“They were more so picking each other up. They knew they could do it. Whether they did it in that particular situation or not, it didn’t matter, because they knew the next guy would succeed in that situation.”

Brody Boyenko is one of the original instructors with Going Yard.
In a best-of-three East Division semifinal series, the Red Sox swept the Medicine Hat Mavericks by scores of 6-2 and 13-7. In the best-of-three East Division Championship Series, the Red Sox faced the Saskatoon Berries, who topped the entire WCBL with a 46-9 mark with their win total setting a new league record for most victories in one regular season.

The Red Sox squeaked out an 8-7 victory in Game 1 at Cairns Field, but the Berries evened the series 1-1 with a sound 8-4 victory in Game 2 at Currie Field. In a series deciding Game 3, the Red Sox used a three-run seventh inning to pull away for a 6-2 victory at Cairns Field.

In the deciding win in Saskatoon, Boyenko had a large number of family and friends in attendance. He said it was special to have them all at the park to see the victory that sent the Red Sox to the league final.

“To be honest, it is always nice when your family is watching, especially in your hometown,” said Boyenko. “When you have to live somewhere else for the summer and they come watch you and your team wins, it is a good feeling.

“It was nice that they got to experience that with me. When you live two-and-a-half hours away from home for the summer, it is not like they can just make every other game. For them to see our team win against the top team in the league and beat them out in playoffs, I thought that was pretty special.”

In the best-of-three WCBL Championship Series, the Red Sox fell 3-2 in 11 innings in Game 1 to the Gulls played at Currie Field. Due to the distance of about 809 kilometres between Regina and Sylvan Lake, it was decided the Gulls, who had homefield advantage for the series, would host Games 2 and 3 of the set.

In Game 2, the Red Sox were down 6-4 going into the ninth inning. They scored six runs in the top of the ninth to ultimately prevail 10-7.

In the series-deciding Game 3, the Red Sox trailed 4-3 after six innings. They scored two in the top of the seventh to go ahead 5-4, and their pitching and defence ensured that score was the game’s final outcome. That victory gave the Red Sox their first WCBL title since winning back-to-back league crowns in 2011 and 2012.

Boyenko said the team’s coaches were proud of the Red Sox players but added there were nervous moments in Game 3. He said the Red Sox got a key hit that squeaked through to the outfield from a hitter in the eighth spot in their lineup during the ninth inning rally in Game 2 that won that contest. Boyenko was aware a similar play could go against the Red Sox once they got in front in Game 3.

Brody Boyenko said his Red Sox experience helps his Going Yard work.
“We won Game 2 by a ground ball to the outfield,” said Boyenko.“Going into that Game 3, we had almost no doubt that it was going to be our game.

“When it came around to the eighth and ninth, those were probably some of the longest innings of the entire season. You are so confident in yourself, but just last game, a simple ground ball won it for us and lost it for them. Going into that last inning when we had to get those three outs, that is all I could think of is it is not over until we get that last out.

“Once we finally got it, it literally felt like the weight of the world was off of our shoulders and mission accomplished. It felt very good.”

These days, Boyenko is back in his regular surroundings at the Indoor Training Centre on the Gordie Howe Sports Complex grounds coaching players as an instructor with Going Yard. He guides players in weight training sessions and works with them in the pitching and batting lanes along with drills on the indoor field turf field. He said his experience with the Red Sox helps coming back to Going Yard.

“It is really nice to return,” said Boyenko, who was the pitching coach with the WCBL’s Swift Current 57s in 2023. “I wasn’t too far away from home, but it is nice to come back to my familiar roots and what I do day to day.

“It is nice to bring back some of the things I even learned as a coach from some of the players. In the summertime, you get players from all over the States, so you never know what coach talks about what and what you can bring back. I’ve been able to learn from some of the players some of the nuances that their coaches teach.

“I’ve been fortunate enough to bring it back and teach it to some of our kids as well.”

Boyenko said the championship win with the Red Sox was the first time in his life he was on a team that won a league title. With how the Red Sox rallied around Lubiniecki’s tragic passing, Boyenko said that the 2025 WCBL season with the Red Sox is something he will take with him forever.

“I would definitely say that was the most memorable just because of the whole Jesse (Lubiniecki) situation,” said Boyenko. “My time in the WCBL, I haven’t won as much as I did with Regina, so obviously, winning is a lot of fun.

Brody Boyenko and the Red Sox pose for WCBL title winning picture.
“I would definitely say the fact that, like I mentioned before, Jesse, and then the fact that we rallied around Jesse and were able to win the league. (It was) very memorable.”

For more information on the Going Yard Baseball Academy, feel free to check out their website at www.gyba.ca. All but the second photo in this piece come courtesy Brody Boyenko.